There is but an imperfect record in
the Gospels of the first year of Jesus’ ministry
among the Jews. Theologians have spoken of it
as the “Year of Obscurity,” but the Occult
traditions speak of it as a most important year of
His ministry, for in it He laid firm foundations for
His future work.
He travelled all over the country,
establishing little circles of disciples and centres
of interest. In cities, towns, villages and hamlets,
He left behind Him little bands of faithful students
who kept alive the flame of Truth, which steadily
kindled the lamps of others who were attracted by
the light. Always among the humblest He labored,
seemingly impressed with the idea that the work must
be begun on the lowest rounds of society’s ladder.
But after a while a few of the more pretentious people
began to attend the meetings, often brought there
by curiosity. They came to smile and be amused,
but many were impressed and remained to pray.
The leaven had been well mixed in the loaf of Jewish
society and it was beginning to work.
Once more the season of the Feast
of the Passover arrived and found Jesus with His followers
in Jerusalem and in the Temple. What memories
the scene awakened in His mind. He could see the
same scenes in which He had participated seventeen
years before. Once more He saw the pitiful slaughter
of the innocent lambs, and witnessed the flow of the
sacrificed blood over the altars and the stones of
the floor of the courts. Once more He saw the
senseless mummery of the priestly ceremonies, which
seemed more pitiful than ever to His developed mind.
He knew that His vision had shown that He was to be
slaughtered even as the sacrificial lambs, and there
arose in His mind that comparison which stayed with
Him ever after that picture of Himself as
the Lamb sacrificed on the Altar of Humanity.
As pure as was this figure in His mind, it seems pitiful
that in the centuries to come His followers would
fall into the error (as equally cruel as that of the
Hebrews) of imagining that His death was a sacrifice
demanded by a cruel Deity to satisfy the Divine Wrath
which had been kindled by the sight of Man’s
shortcomings and sins. The barbarous conception
of a wrathful God whose anger against His people could
be appeased only by the bloody slaughter of innocent
creatures, is fully equalled by the theological dogmas
that the same Divine Wrath could be, and was, appeased
by the blood of Jesus, the Master who had come to
deliver the Message of Truth. Such a conception
is worthy of only the most barbarous and primitive
minds. And yet it has been preached and taught
for centuries in the very name of Jesus
Himself and men have been persecuted and
put to death because they refused to believe that the
Supreme Creator of the Universe could be such a malignant,
cruel, revengeful Being, or that the One Mind of All
could be flattered and cajoled into forgiveness by
the sight of the death of the Man of Sorrows.
It seems almost incredible that such a teaching could
have arisen from the pure teachings of Jesus, and
that such has been Man’s incapacity to grasp
the Inner Teachings, that the Church built upon Jesus’
ministry has adopted and insisted upon the acceptance
of such dogmas. But this baneful cloud of ignorance
and barbaric thought is gradually lifting, until even
now the intelligent minds in the Church refuse to
accept or teach the doctrine in its original crudity,
they either passing it over in silence, or else dressing
it in a more attractive garb.
Jesus taught no such barbarous things.
His conception of Deity was of the highest, for He
had received the most advanced teachings of the Mystics,
who had instructed Him in the Mystery of the Immanent
God, abiding everywhere and in all things. He
had advanced far beyond the conception of Deity which
pictured the One as a savage, bloodthirsty, vengeful,
hating, tribal deity, ever crying for sacrifices and
burnt-offerings, and capable of the meanest of human
emotions. He saw this conception as He saw the
conception of other races and peoples, all of which
had their tribal or national gods, which loved that
particular tribe or people, and which hated all other
races or nationalities. He saw that back of,
and behind, all these barbarous and primitive conceptions
of Deity there dwelt an ever calm and serene Being,
the Creator and Ruler of countless Universes millions
and millions of worlds filling all space,
and above all of the petty attributes that had been
bestowed upon the petty gods of human creation.
He knew that the God of each nation, of each person
in fact, was but a magnified idea of the characteristics
of the nation or individual in question. And
he knew that Hebrew conception was no exception to
this rule.
To anyone having grown to an appreciation
of the grandeur and greatness of the idea of an Immanent
Universal Being, the dogma of a Deity demanding a
blood sacrifice to appease its wrath is too pitiful
and degrading to be worth even a moment’s serious
consideration. And to such a one the prostitution
of the high teachings of Jesus by the introduction
of such a base conception is a source of righteous
indignation and earnest protest. The Mystics in
the Christian Church throughout the centuries have
never accepted any such teachings, although the persecution
of the church authorities have prevented their protests
being made openly until of late years. The Mystics
alone have kept alive the Light of the Truth through
the Dark Ages of the Christian Church. But now
has come the dawn of a new day, and the Church itself
is seeing the Light, and the pulpits are beginning
to resound with the truth of Mystic Christianity.
And in the years to come the Teachings of Jesus, the
Master, will flow pure and clear, once more freed
from the corrupting dogmas which so long polluted the
Fount.
As Jesus wandered silently through
the courts and chambers of the Temple, His indignation
was aroused by a sight which seemed to Him to portray
more forcibly than aught else the degradation which
had fallen upon the Temple by reason of the corruption
of the priesthood. Grouped around the steps and
outer courts of the Temple He saw the groups of brokers,
money-changers and merchants who were doing a thriving
business with the thousands of strangers attending
the Feast. The money-changers were exchanging
the coins of the realm for the inferior coins of the
outlying regions, charging a large commission for the
exchange. The brokers were buying articles, or
loaning money on them, from the poor pilgrims, who
were sacrificing their personal belongings for cash
with which they might purchase the animals for the
sacrifice. The merchants had droves of cattle,
flocks of sheep and cages of doves within the sacred
precincts of the Temple, which they were selling to
the pilgrims who wished to offer sacrifices. Tradition
has it that the corrupt priesthood profited by the
sale of these “privileges” granted to
this horde of traffickers in the Temple precincts.
The vile practice had gradually crept in and established
a firm foothold in the Temple, although contrary to
the ancient practice.
To Jesus the horrible scenes of the
Temple sacrificial rites seemed to focus in this final
exhibition of greed, materialism and lack of spirituality.
It seemed to be blasphemy and sacrilege of the most
glaring type. And His very soul felt nauseated
and outraged by the sight. His fingers twitched,
and laying hold of a bundle of knotted cords which
had been used by some cattle-driver to urge forward
his herd, He rushed forward upon the horde of traffickers,
whirling His instrument of chastisement over the shoulders
and backs of the offenders, driving them out in a
frantic rout, upsetting their benches and paraphernalia,
crying in a voice of authority, “Out, ye wretches!
This is the House of the Lord, and ye have made it
a den of thieves.” The “Meek and
lowly Nazarene” became an avenger of the prostitution
of the Temple.
The brokers, money-changers and merchants
fled before His mighty charge, leaving their scattered
money over the floors of the Temple. They dared
not return, for Jesus had aroused the wrath of the
people against them, and a cry arose for the old practice
of protecting the sacred place against such invasion.
But the traffickers sought out the High-priests and
complained bitterly of this annulment of their “privileges”
and “franchises,” for which they had paid
so highly. And the High-priests, being compelled
to refund the price paid for the concessions, were
much wrought up over the matter, and then and there
swore vengeance against the Master who had dared interfere
with their system of what the world now calls by the
suggestive name of “graft.” And this
vengeance and hatred waxed stronger each moment, and
was to a great extent the moving factor in the schemes
and intrigues which two years later resulted in the
frightful scene on Calvary.
The succeeding months were filled
with wanderings up and down the land, spreading the
work and making new converts and followers. Jesus
did not take the position of a great preacher at this
time, but seemed to be rather a teacher of the few
whom He gathered around Him at each point and place.
He observed but few ceremonies, that of Baptism being
the principal one, and which, as we have shown, was
an Essenic rite having an occult and mystical significance.
The students of the New Testament may read between
its leaves the history of the ministry of Jesus at
this time, noting the working of the leaven in the
mass of the Jewish mind.
About this time Jesus was sorely distressed
at the terrible news which reached Him regarding the
fate of his cousin, John the Baptist, who had been
His Forerunner. The Baptist had dared to thrust
his preachings and rebukes into the very precincts
of a corrupt court, and had brought down upon his
head the natural consequences of his rashness.
Herod had thrust him into a gloomy dungeon and there
were rumors of a worse fate yet in store for him.
And that fate soon overtook him. Refusing the
chance of life and liberty that was promised him if
he would but break his vows of asceticism and indulge
the passionate desires of a royal princess, turning
away from the base proposal with the horror of the
true mystic, he met his fate like a man
knowing the Truth, and the head which graced the royal
platter bore upon its face no expression of fear or
regret. John had conquered even in Death.
Jesus retired once more into the Desert
upon the news of John’s death reaching him.
Added to His sorrow came the conviction that there
was a new work set before Him to do. John’s
death necessitated a combining of the work of the
Baptist with that of Jesus’ own ministry.
The followers of the two teachers must be combined
into one great body, under the supervision of the
Master Himself, aided by the most worthy and capable
of His disciples. The tragic death of John played
a most important part in the future ministry of the
Master, and He sought the solace and inspiration of
the Desert in His consideration of the plans and details
of His new work. Students will note that from
the time He emerged from the Desert He threw off the
cloak of reserve and retirement and stepped boldly
before the people as an ardent preacher to multitudes
and an impassioned orator and public speaker.
No more the little circle of appreciative students the
rostrum with the great crowds of hearers were His
from that time.
Returning from His work in Samaria
and Judea, He once more made Galilee the scene of
His principal work. The new spirit which He now
threw into His preaching attracted the attention of
the public, and enormous crowds attended His meetings.
He spoke now with a new air of authority, differing
greatly from His former mild tones as a teacher of
the few. Parables and allegories and other rich
Oriental figures of speech fell from His lips, and
many of the educated classes flocked to hear the wonderful
young orator and preacher. He seemed to have an
intuitive insight into the minds of His hearers, and
His appeals reached their hearts as personal calls
to righteousness, right thinking and right living.
From this time on His ministry assumed the character
of an active propaganda, instead of the usual quiet
mission of the Mystic.
And here began that remarkable series
of wonder workings or “miracles” which
He evidently employed to attract the attention of the
public and at the same time to perform kindly and
worthy acts. Not that He used these wonder-workings
as a bid for sensational interest or self-glory the
character of Jesus rendered such a course impossible but
He knew that nothing would so attract the interest
of an Oriental race as occurrences of this kind, and
He hoped to then awaken in them a real spiritual interest
and fervor, which would rise far above the demand
for “miracles.” In adopting this course
Jesus followed the example of the holy men in India,
with whose works He was personally familiar, owing
to His sojourn in that land.
And, then let us say, that advanced
occultists see nothing “supernatural”
nor incredible in these “miracles” of Jesus.
On the contrary, they know them to be the result of
the application of certain well established natural
laws, which, while almost unknown to the masses of
people, are still known and occasionally made use of
by the advanced occultists of all lands. Skeptics
and unbelievers may sneer at these things, and many
faint-faith Christians may wish to apologize or “explain”
these wonderful happenings, but the advanced occultist
needs no “explanations” nor apologies.
He has more faith than the church-goer, for he knows
of the existence and use of these occult powers latent
in Man. There is no material effect or phenomenon
that is “supernatural” the Laws
of Nature are in full operation on the material plane
and cannot be overcome. But there are among such
Natural Laws certain phases and principles that are
so little known to the average mind that when they
are manifested Nature’s Laws seemed to be transcended,
and the result is called “a miracle.”
The occult tradition tells us that Jesus was a past-master
in the knowledge and application of the occult forces
of nature, and that even the wonders that He wrought
during His Jewish ministry were but as child’s
play when compared with those that He might have manifested
had He seen fit to do so. In fact, it is believed
that some of His greatest wonder-workings have never
been recorded, for He always impressed upon His chosen
followers the advisability of refraining from laying
too much stress on these things. The “miracles”
recorded in the Gospels were only those which were
most widely known among the people. The greater-wonders
were deemed too sacred for common gossip.
When the Master and His followers
reached Cana, which, by the way, had been the scene
of his first “miracle” the changing
of the water into wine at the wedding feast one
of the most striking of His earlier manifestations
of occult power occurred. An influential citizen
of Capernaum, a town a score of miles distant, who
met Him and besought His aid and power in the interest
of his young son, who lay dying at his home.
The man besought Jesus to hasten to Capernaum to heal
the youth ere he die. Jesus smiled kindly upon
him and bade him return to his son, for the youth
was even now restored to health and strength and life.
His hearers were astounded at the reply and the doubters
smiled knowingly, foreseeing a defeat for the young
Master when the news of the youth’s death should
become known. Those of His followers who were
faint of heart and weak of faith felt most uncomfortable
and began to whisper the “if” of doubt.
But Jesus continued His working with a calm air of
certainty, without further remarks. It was the
seventh hour of the day when the words were spoken.
The father hastened homeward to see
whether the Master had succeeded or failed. A
day or two passed with no word from Capernaum.
The scoffers of the wedding feast repeated their sneers
and revilings the word “charlatan”
was again heard passing from lip to lip. Then
came news from the distant village, and upon its arrival
the voice of scorn was stilled, and the hearts of
the faint again beat freely. The word came that
when the father had reached his house he was greeted
by the household with cries of joy and news that at
the seventh hour the fever had abated and the
crisis had been passed.
And yet the “miracle”
above recorded was no greater than many occultists
have performed in all times no greater than
the many similar cures that have been performed by
the modern healers of the many metaphysical cults.
It was simply an application of the subtle forces
of nature called into operation by mental concentration.
It was an instance of what in modern phrase is called
“absent treatment” along metaphysical
lines. In saying this we wish in no way to detract
from the wonder that Jesus had wrought, but merely
to let the student know that the power is still possessed
by others and is not a “supernatural”
thing but the operation of purely natural laws.
About this time there occurred another
event in His life, and a manifestation of His power
which is noted in the New Testament and which is told
in the occult tradition with somewhat more detail.
It occurred when Jesus visited his home town of Nazareth
on the eve of the Jewish Sabbath. He rested over
night and then the following morning betook Himself
to the regular services in the local synagogue.
He took the seat which He had occupied as a young boy
with Joseph. No doubt the familiar scene awakened
memories of His strange youthful history in His mind.
Then, much to His surprise, He heard Himself called
to the platform to conduct the service. It must
be remembered that Jesus was a regular rabbi, or priest,
by birth, education and training, and was entitled
to Conduct the Jewish service. No doubt His townspeople
wished to hear their young townsman address and exhort
them. He took the place of authority in the synagogue
and proceeded to read the regular service in the accustomed
manner, as prescribed by the custom and laws of the
church. The prayers, chantings and readings succeeded
each other in their regular order. Then came the
preaching of the sermon. Taking the sacred roll
from its receptacle, He read the text from Isaiah,
“The spirit of the Lord is upon me because He
hath anointed me to preach the good tidings,”
etc. Then He began his exposition of the
text He had just read.
But instead of the expected customary
words and illustrations technical theological
hair-splitting and dreary platitudes He
began to preach in a manner unknown to the Nazarenes.
His opening sentence broke the silence and greatly
startled and disturbed the congregation. “This
day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears,”
were his opening words. And then He began a statement
of His conception of His ministry and His Message.
Thrusting aside all precedent and musty authority,
He boldly proclaimed that He had come to establish
a new conception of the Truth a conception
that would overturn the priestly policy of formalism
and lack of spirituality a conception that
would ignore forms and ceremonies, and cleave close
to the spirit of the Sacred Teachings. And then
He began a scathing denunciation of the lack of spiritual
advancement among the Jewish people their
materialism and desire for physical enjoyments and
their drifting away from the highest ideals of the
race. He preached the mystic doctrine, and insisted
that they be applied to the problems of every-day
life and conduct. He brought down the teachings
of the Kaballah from the cloudy heights, and set them
before the people in plain, practical form. He
bade them aspire to great spiritual heights, forsaking
the base ideals to which they had clung. He ran
counter to every custom and prejudice of the people
before Him, and showed a lack of reverence for all
of their petty forms and traditions. He bade them
leave the illusions of material life and follow the
Light of the Spirit wherever it might lead them.
These and many other things told He them.
And then arose a disturbance among
the congregation. They began to interrupt and
question Him, and many were the contradictions and
denials hurled at Him from the benches. Some began
to sneer at His pretensions as the Bearer of the Message,
and demanded that He work a wonder or “miracle”
and give them a sign. This demand He flatly refused
to grant, not deeming the same proper, or in accordance
with the occult custom which always frowned upon wonder-working
in response to such a demand. Then they began
to abuse Him and cries of “charlatan”
and “fraud” began to resound from the walls
of the synagogue. They reminded Him of His humble
birth and condition of His parents, and refused to
believe that any such person as He had any right to
claim extraordinary powers or privileges. Then
came from His lips the famous saying, “A prophet
is not without honor, save in his own country.”
Then He began a fresh assault upon
their prejudices and narrow views their
pet superstitions and bigotry. He stripped from
them their garb of hypocrisy and assumed piety, and
showed them their naked souls in all their ugliness
and moral uncleanliness. He poured burning invective
and vitriolic denunciations into their midst, and spared
no terms that could properly be applied to them.
In a short time the congregation was beside itself
with rage, and the pretended righteous indignation
of a flock of hypocrites and formalists who had heard
themselves described in disrespectful terms by one
they regarded as an upstart young man from the lower
classes of their virtuous community. They felt
that they had bestowed a flattering honor upon Him,
as a mark of consideration for a young townsman upon
His return from a foreign and domestic missionary
tour. And now to think that He had thus basely
betrayed their courtesy and showed in how little esteem
He really held them surely this was beyond
human endurance. And then the storm broke upon
Him.
Leaving their seats in the synagogue,
the congregation rushed upon the young preacher, and
tearing Him from the platform, they pushed Him out
of the building. And then the jostling, hustling,
pushing crowd carried Him before them along the village
streets and out into the suburbs. He resisted
not, deeming it unworthy to struggle with them.
At last, however, He was compelled to defend Himself.
He perceived that it was the intention of the mob
to push Him over a precipice that had been formed
on the side of a hill just beyond the town limits.
He waited patiently until they had urged Him to the
very brink of the decline, and until it needed but
one strong push to press Him over its edge and into
the gorge below. And then He exerted His occult
forces in a proper self-defense. Not a blow struck
He not a man did He smite with the wondrous
occult power at His command, which would have paralyzed
their muscles or even have stretched them lifeless
at His feet. No, he controlled Himself with a
firm hand, and merely bent upon them a look.
But such a look!
A glance in which was concentrated
the mighty Will developed by mystic knowledge and
occult practice. It was the Gaze of the Occult
Master, the power of which ordinary men may not withstand.
And the mob, feeling its mighty force, experienced
the sensation of abject fear and terror. Their
hair arose, their eyes started from their sockets,
their knees shook under them, and then, with a wild
shout of horror they began to scatter and fly, making
a wide pathway for the Man of Mystery who now strode
through their ranks with that awful gaze which seemed
to pierce the veil of mortality and to peer at things
ineffable and beyond human ken. And with His
eyes refusing to look again upon the familiar scenes
of His youth, He departed from Nazareth, forsaking
it forever as His home place. Verily, indeed,
the Prophet hath no honor in His own land. Those
who should have been His staunchest supporters were
the first in His own land to threaten Him with violence.
The attempt of Nazareth was the prophecy of Calvary,
and Jesus so knew it. But He had set his feet
upon The Path, and drew not back from it.
Turning His back upon Nazareth, Jesus
established a new centre or home in Capernaum, which
place remained the nearest approach to home to Him
during the remainder of His Ministry and until His
death. The traditions have it that His mother
came to live also at Capernaum, together with some
of His brothers. It is also related that his
sisters and brothers, both those remaining at Nazareth
and those removing to Capernaum, were sorely vexed
with Him at His conduct at the synagogue, which they
deemed not “respectable” nor proper, and
they accordingly looked upon Him as an eccentric relative
whose vagaries had brought disrepute upon the family.
He was regarded much in the light of a “black-sheep”
and “undesirable relation” by all of His
family except His mother, who still clung to her beloved
first-born. The mother made her home with some
of the brothers and sisters of Jesus, but He was not
made welcome there, but was looked upon as an outcast
and wanderer. He once spoke of this, saying that
while the birds and beasts had nests and homes, He,
the Son of Man, had nowhere to lay his head.
And so He wandered around in His own land, as He had
in foreign countries, an ascetic, living upon the alms
of the people who loved Him and listened to His words.
And in so doing He followed the plans and life of
the Hindu ascetics, who even unto this day so live,
“with yellow-robe and begging bowl,” and
“without money or scrip in their purses.”
The Jewish ascetic for such was Jesus has
His counterparts in the wandering holy-men of India
and Persia today.
But it must be remembered that even
in Jesus’ time, the spectacle of a rabbi living
this ascetic life, forsaking the emoluments of His
priestly rank and deliberately taking up the roll of
a poverty-stricken mendicant, was a rare one.
It ran contrary to all the thrifty and prudent customs
and ideals of the race. It was an importation
from the Essenes, or from the strange people of far-off
lands, and it was not relished by the Jewish authorities,
or people who preferred the synagogues and Temple,
with their sleek, well-fed priests, with fancy robes
and attractive ceremonies.
Making His base at Capernaum, Jesus
began to form His band of disciples with more show
of a working organization. To some He delegated
certain authority, and bade them perform certain dues
of the ministry. For some reason He selected
some of His leading lieutenants from the ranks of
the fishermen who plied their vocation along the waters
of that port of the country. The fishers of fish
became the fishers of men. Jesus became very
popular among the fishing fraternity, and the legends,
as well as the New Testament narratives, tell of instances
in which He bade His poor fishermen friends (who had
been unfortunate in their day’s haul) to let
down their nets at some point indicated by Him, when
to their surprise and joy their nets would be filled
to overflowing.
Little acts of kindness bestowed here
and there among the humbler classes tended to have
Jesus looked upon and spoken of as a friend of the
people, but which reputation excited the jealousy of
the authorities who held that such acts could be prompted
by none other than a selfish motive, and that motive
the incitement of the masses to rebellion in the interest
of Himself as a Messiah. And so, we see His very
acts of kindness and compassion served to increase
the suspicion and hatred which the authorities, both
ecclesiastical and temporal, had always felt toward
Him.
His desire to alleviate the sufferings
of the poor and wretched took Him much among these
people and away from the so-called higher classes.
The “plain people” were regarded by Him
as the salt of the earth, and they, in turn, regarded
Him as their champion and advisor. And especially
to the sick did He devote His time and powers.
He made many marvellous cures, a few only of which
were recorded in the New Testament narratives.
The occult legends state that these cures were of
daily occurrence and that wherever He went He left
behind Him a trail of people healed of all kinds of
disorders, and that people flocked for miles to be
healed of their infirmities. The Gospels relate
that He cured great numbers of people by the simple
process of laying on of hands (a favorite method of
occult healers) “he laid his hands on every
one of them and healed them.”
It is related that at Capernaum his
attention was directed toward a madman, who suddenly
cried out, “I know Thee, Thou Holy One of God,”
whereupon Jesus spoke a few authoritative words and
cured him of his malady, by methods that will describe
the nature of the man’s psychic disturbance
to any advanced student of occultism. Demoniac
possession is not believed in by orthodox Christians
of today, but Jesus evidently shared the belief in
obsession held by students of Psychism and similar
subjects, judging from the words He used in relieving
this man from his malady. We advise our students
to read the Gospel records in connection with these
lessons, in order to follow the subject along the
old familiar paths, but with the additional light of
the interpretation of Mystic Christianity.
The growing reputation of Jesus as
a healer of the sick soon taxed His physical powers
to the utmost. He felt Himself called upon to
do the work of a dozen men, and His nature rebelled
at the unequal task imposed upon it. It seemed
as if all Capernaum were sick. Her streets were
crowded by seekers after health and strength.
At last He perceived that His work as a Teacher was
being submerged in His work as a Healer. And,
after a period of prayer and meditation, He put aside
from Him the claims of humanity for the healing of
physical ills, and turning His back upon the waiting
patients at Capernaum, He once more started forward
on His pilgrimage as a Preacher of the Message, and
thereafter would heal physical ills only occasionally,
and, instead, devote the main portion of His time to
preaching the Truth to those who were ready to hear
it. It was a hard thing for a man with the tender
heart of Jesus to leave behind Him the crowd of patients
at Capernaum, but it was necessary for Him to do so,
else He would have remained merely an occult healer
of physical ailments instead of the Messenger of the
Truth whose work it was to kindle in many places the
Flame of the Spirit, that would serve as the true
Light of the World long after the physical bodies of
all then living had been again resolved to dust.
And so, leaving behind Him Capernaum
and its wailing multitudes, He, followed by His disciples,
moved out toward the open country, to spread the glad
tidings and to bring to the hearts of many “that
peace which passeth all understanding.”